Skip to main content

Big data helps San Diego optimise public transit

San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (MTS) has turned to Cubic’s big data subsidiary Urban Insights to make better use of its data, according to a report in Information Week. The agency has disparate data sources, including a smart-card payment system, GPS-based automatic vehicle location devices on buses, automatic passenger counters on trolleys, and extensive route and schedule information formatted in the general transit feed specification (GTFS) format developed by Google in 2006. "We look at all
July 14, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
1986 San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (MTS) has turned to 378 Cubic’s big data subsidiary Urban Insights to make better use of its data, according to a report in Information Week.

The agency has disparate data sources, including a smart-card payment system, GPS-based automatic vehicle location devices on buses, automatic passenger counters on trolleys, and extensive route and schedule information formatted in the general transit feed specification (GTFS) format developed by Google in 2006.

"We look at all these data sources independently, and they help us improve performance, but we haven't been able to make correlations among the various data sources," said Sharon Cooney, MTS chief of staff.

Disparate data sources are all too common in transportation projects, so Urban Insights has developed a cloud-based analytics modelling platform built on Hadoop open source software.

"MTS wanted not just a one-off study of transit usage but a reusable process of integrating data sources and producing insights so planners can determine when travellers are not using the network as anticipated," said Wade Rosado, Urban Insights' director of analytics. "We have to align and make sense of the data to unravel the mystery of how people are using the system."

Passenger analysis in San Diego is complicated by the fact that the tram system operates on a barrier-less honour system, where passengers are expected to tap their smart cards on fare validators as they enter the platform. Fare collection on buses is controlled by the driver, but there is no connection to vehicle locators to show how many passengers boarded at which stop. Both factors make it difficult to track where people start and end their journey and where they transfer from route to route or from trams to buses.

Urban Insights and MTS began by analysing tapping patterns at the tram platforms – looking at the level of passengers versus fare validation. The analysis began with the GTFS data on when specific trams are expected to arrive where on a route.  This was correlated to the tram platform validation data. To get a complete picture of ridership, Urban Insights added data from the automatic passenger counters, which is time stamped, and correlated it with the GTFS scheduling data.

"Now we can see how many boarded versus how many tapped," said Cooney. "The only other way we could do that previously was through handheld units that officers use to spot-check who tapped and who didn't, but that's only a small sampling of overall system usage."

Urban Insights and MTS are currently working on aligning and correlating all available data to study how these route changes have impacted various point-to-point travel times, transfer points, ridership levels, and, with added customer survey data, overall rider satisfaction levels.

The outputs include blended data sets, reports, and sophisticated geospatial visualizations (as shown in the image above). These maps show the quantity of transfers made at particular locations with different size rings. Services offered are depicted by shapes, with sizes and colours indicating different attributes of those services. The visualisations will help MTS determine where and whether transfer activity is inconsistent with the service levels offered.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Enforcement needs automation and communication
    February 1, 2012
    TISPOL's Peter van de Beek questions whether the thought processes which drive enforcement technology development are always the right ones. Peter van de Beek sees an ever-greater role for technology in traffic enforcement but is concerned that the emphasis of technological development and discussion is not always in the right places. 'Old-fashioned' face-to-face policing remains as valid as it ever did, he feels, but adds that there should be greater communication with those engaged at the sharp end of saf
  • Connecticut Transit uses web feedback to improve user experience
    May 27, 2014
    Connecticut champions open government and open data to help fostertransparency, accountability and citizen engagement – and that includes transportation matters as Andrew Bardin Williams discovers. The last thing anyone wanted was to inconvenience or displace others - least of all people who lived and worked in the neighbourhood. Yet, workers in an office building in downtown New Haven, Conn., were tired of shuffling through hoards of people who kept sitting on the stoop to the building while waiting for th
  • Cubic’s holistic view of traffic management
    May 25, 2022
    How can cities and transit agencies ease congested roadways? Andy Taylor of Cubic Transportation Systems suggests it would help to take a more holistic view of the problem
  • Study calls Inrix off-street parking the ‘clear winner’ in US and Europe
    January 21, 2016
    An independent off-street parking benchmark study carried out by automotive technology research firm SBD has concluded that ParkMe, an Inrix company, beat Parkopedia in data accuracy across the key attribute categories in five cities in the US and Germany. According to the study, overall, ParkMe was 12 per cent more accurate than Parkopedia across a set of core attributes that are essential to automakers for customer satisfaction. Most important, ParkMe was 23 per cent more accurate providing the precise